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*Virginia Beach. The beachfront setting provides a better definition for the condo high-rises to be distinguished for visitors, especially with a boardwalk. It's similar to Myrtle Beach, SC, Panama City Beach, FL, or the northern section of Ocean City, MD in that its pretty boxy in feel, but is a pretty impressive wall of highrises for quite a distance. Anaheim doesn't have much of a distinguishable skyline by comparison which is mostly lowrises with an occasional midrise here and there.
*Virginia Beach's tallest building is actually in the Town Center section and that has a mini-skyline on its own, but there are considerably fewer highrises compared to the beachfront. And quite frankly, VA's Town Center even takes the candle to downtown Anaheim.
For the Providence/Mobile matchup, I'll have to go with Providence. There's a better variety of architectural styles and more midrises to support its two main highrises. Mobile has three main highrises and the tallest overall building, but they're all from the postmodern era and there aren't nearly as many midrises to back them up.
Manhattan's Upper West Side riverfront vs. Manhattan's Upper East Side riverfront
I'll go with upper east side. San Antonio or Tampa?
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